Hidden Sector Hydrogen as Dark Matter: Small-scale Structure Formation Predictions and the Importance of Hyperfine Interactions
Kimberly K. Boddy, Manoj Kaplinghat, Anna Kwa, Annika H. G. Peter

TL;DR
This paper explores a dark matter model where dark hydrogen-like particles exhibit velocity-dependent self-interactions, potentially explaining small galaxy cores and affecting early cosmic structure, with unique observable signatures.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed atomic physics model of hidden sector hydrogen, analyzing its self-interactions, cooling effects, and structure formation implications, which are novel in dark matter research.
Findings
Self-interactions explain small galaxy cores.
Dark hydrogen mass range is 10-100 GeV.
Minimum halo mass is between 10^{3.5} and 10^7 solar masses.
Abstract
We study the atomic physics and the astrophysical implications of a model in which the dark matter is the analog of hydrogen in a secluded sector. The self interactions between dark matter particles include both elastic scatterings as well as inelastic processes due to a hyperfine transition. The self-interaction cross sections are computed by numerically solving the coupled Schr\"{o}dinger equations for this system. We show that these self interactions exhibit the right velocity dependence to explain the low dark matter density cores seen in small galaxies while being consistent with all constraints from observations of clusters of galaxies. For a viable solution, the dark hydrogen mass has to be in 10--100 GeV range and the dark fine-structure constant has to be larger than 0.02. Precisely for this range of parameters, we show that significant cooling losses may occur due to inelastic…
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